Something I noticed on a few websites, including stackoverflow, is that they leave tracking settings up to a different website, which still lets that external party know what websites a user has been seeing, and this can be maliciously abused.

I realize this might have been mentioned before, but I didn’t see any similar posts in a quick search.

  • @jmeelOP
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    11 year ago

    No, just for preventing (I guess you could call it sanitizing with the web as it is now) shady traffic that might happen in the background. It’s unfortunate that phones don’t have a higher control on authorisation for apps to selectively block user specified IP or web addresses.

    Heh, I guess adblocking IS sanitizing your internet access

    • Apathy Tree
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      11 year ago

      Ah, gotcha, yeah I use my pihole rather manually to block things I don’t recognize. It’s kinda fun to see what breaks (usually fucking nothing, surprise surprise).

      So like I get an ad on a page, nope, go into pihole and block literally anything from that device in tht time range which I don’t recognize as the url I wanted or some necessary component, reload and see what happens.

      I’ve broken a few games and pages doing that, but it’s easy enough to walk back, just reload the thing and you get a new query to unblock.

      But it’s nice for preventing my tv from reporting on my behavior (I like the apps, not the shady data collection or ads), shady sites as you say, and with a basic vpn, golden on mobile too.

      It’s a shame it doesn’t handle cookies tho. I’m on ghostery dawn browser which takes that stuff as a top priority (dawn hasn’t been updated in a year so I’m using it cautiously for link handling only, with ghost tabs as the default so my activity and trackers clear when I close the browser) but I’d prefer a single solution for everything network wide…

      • @jmeelOP
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        11 year ago

        Yeah what you’ve described using your pihole sounds like a dream set-up. I honestly think that is the most powerful shield any home can have against data-mining apps, operating systems (looking at you, windows), websites, and even some physical devices (internet of things).

        Cookie tracking is something that - now that I think about it - I’m not too familiar with in terms of the original intended site tracking it, but if it’s external sites, then yeah just blocking said external site from ever being loaded or script therefrom run should be good enough.